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Techniques in Horse Training

By | Mar 31, 2010 | 0 Comments | Rating: 0

No one is born a natural horseman. Natural horsemanship has its advantages as its helps you communicate to the horse and understand its cues naturally with your instincts. The horse could sense your understanding and it could eventually form a bond between the horseman and the horse. There are trainers who have developed horse training techniques wherein they incorporated the gentleness of natural horsemanship in.

As you get to know your horse you can develop horse training techniques based on your experience. New trainers keep coming up with new ideas frequently. The 'Round pen technique' is one of the famous techniques. A round shaped pen is used in this technique to train the horse. As a result the horse always maintains eye contact with the trainer and cannot get restricted to a corner as there are none. The horse keeps moving forward as a result. The round pen technique is well-known for its efficiency in natural horse training which could also be a sound investment.

Imprinting has also known to be very effective for training foals. Imprinting might expose them to touch and other sensations that it would come across throughout its life since the horse is still very young. With imprinting, your foal could be trained to control its response to certain smells, sounds, and feelings. Another form of technique is the imprinting which is a highly rewarding horse training technique. The trick is to get to the young horse as soon as you can.

The 'Single rein riding' is also a famous technique. In this horse training technique you go around a round or oval pen with a halter and lead rope and not a bridle and reins. "A horse moves away from pressure" is the principle applied here. To make the horse move you apply pressure on the lead rope on the horse's neck to make him divert his direction.

To stop a horse, lean forward slightly and swing the rope in front of the horse's nose and take it to the other side. Now rather than pulling the rope to slow him just adjust the angle of the turn and shift the body weight slightly. A naturally trained horse would get the cue and slow. On the other side, a naurally trained horse would get scared when he see the rope in front of his nose.

There are various equipments, products and materials developed by trainers that you can find for natural horse training techniques. There is an end objective for every horse training technique.e. it can be for general training or for specific problem behavior training or certain discipline training.

There are various horse training techniques which you can try to train your horse. You may also come up with certain techniques using your experiences. It is a continuous process and the learning never really stops. Incorporate your learning with the horse training techniques and you can come up with innovative horse training techniques.




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